Snowfall Welcome In Parched Areas Of State

Statewide Iowa — Two-thirds of Iowa counties are considered to be abnormally dry or in some stage of drought, with far northwest Iowa the driest of all. State Climatologist Justin Glisan says that, while we may not be excited about winter, the drought makes this month’s snowfall particularly welcome.

(As above) “We had precipitation deficits starting to stack up in western Iowa, especially west central Iowa, going back last fall and then drying creeping into much of western Iowa moving into April, May and especially June, where we saw drought conditions expand across western Iowa,” Glisan says.

The lack of adequate subsoil moisture is a remarkable turn-around after recording flooding just a couple of years ago in several areas.

(As above) “2018 was the second-wettest year on record. 2019 was the 12th wettest year on record,” Glisan says. “You put those two years together — the wettest two-year stretch for the state of Iowa going back 148 years.” 

Having snow drifts stick around for a while would be a good thing, according to Glisan, because it may help replenish moisture levels.

(As above) “But of course drier soils freeze faster and they’ll freeze deeper,” Glisan says, “so we don’t want a really deep freeze in the subsoil because that will act like a concrete layer, no water infiltration getting into that deeper soil.” 

Much of Iowa, including here in the KIWA listening area, was in the second snowstorm they’ve experienced in less than a week.

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